I hadn't seen that, it looks cool. I'm integrating the equations of motion in between each frame, so each integration and all the drawing commands are occuring in less than 1/60th of one second -- my guess is that is faster than what is being done in scilab, plus I'm not sure what kind of equations they are using to describe the dynamics of their bicycle model.
~Luke On Tue, May 25, 2010 at 11:45 PM, John Pye <[email protected]> wrote: > Interesting! Have you seen this? > > http://www.snv.jussieu.fr/~wensgen/Doc/scilab-2.6/demos_html/node254.html<http://www.snv.jussieu.fr/%7Ewensgen/Doc/scilab-2.6/demos_html/node254.html> > http://www.snv.jussieu.fr/~wensgen/Doc/scilab-2.6/demos_html/m0_23.gif<http://www.snv.jussieu.fr/%7Ewensgen/Doc/scilab-2.6/demos_html/m0_23.gif> > > Done with Scilab... perhaps not as fast as your GSL code? > > Cheers > JP > > Luke wrote: > > Dear GSL users and developers, > > I've been working on and off for the past couple of months on an open > > source project, OBD, to bring the dynamics of the bicycle to a wider > > audience by utilizing widely available open source tools. > > _______________________________________________ Help-gsl mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/help-gsl
